Posts Tagged ‘Destructor’
From the depths
January 31, 2011Longtime ADDXSTC readers will have little doubt as to how much I love the latest page of “Prison Break” on DestructorComics.com.
Destructor update
January 27, 2011Today’s page of “Prison Break” may be my favorite Destructor page so far.
Carnival of souls: Wizard, Comics Code, Fantastic Four, more
January 25, 2011* Kevin Melrose at Robot 6 rounds up links and commentary about the Wizard/ToyFare shutdown, including the shell game being played by Gareb Shamus’s various ventures.
* Excellent investigative reporting by Newsarama’s Vaneta Rogers, who attempts to unravel who, exactly, ran the now-defunct Comics Code Authority, and just how much “authority” he or she or they actually had. It ends with a terrific cautionary tale from retailer advocate Joe Field of how ratings systems of the sort that have replaced the Comics Code often have the paradoxical effect of decreasing the amount of all-ages content available to consumers. (Via Sam Humphries.)
* Tom Spurgeon worries that Marvel’s much-hyped death of a Fantastic Four character in this week’s issue #587 is taking something intended to heal years-old structural problems with comics’ Direct Market — monopoly distributor Diamond’s decision to begin shipping comics to retailers a day before they go on sale, to give those retailers more time to properly stock their stores — and transforming it before our very eyes into just another short-term sales-goosing gimmick (an issue so important we’re letting retailers break the embargo and sell it the day they get it instead of the day after!) of the sort that caused all those structural problems in the first place. I worry about that too. Silver lining, though? For the second time in recent memory, Marvel’s mainstream-media hype for a character death will actually direct curious readers to a good comic with a sizable run of strong quality behind it. There are much worse fates I could imagine than for someone to be duped into buying into the Jonathan Hickman/Steve Epting/Dale Eaglesham Fantastic Four run, or the Ed Brubaker/Steve Epting/Mike Perkins Captain America run before it.
* Destroyer’s Dan Bejar, whose Kaputt is an early candidate for Album of the Year, gives very good interview to NPR’s Matthew Perpetua and The Onion AV Club’s Noel Murray. Bejar made a tremendous record and talks about it with real panache.
* If you know someone who passionately dislikes Ween, chances are it’s because of the track from their 1994 masterpiece Chocolate and Cheese called “The HIV Song.” Here’s a fascinating passage about the song — gallows humor at its most awesomely awful — from Hank Shteamer’s 33 1/3 book on the album.
* Real Life Horror: The by-now comically transparent punitive mistreatment and overincarceration of WikiLeaker Pfc. Bradley Manning appears to be getting some news-media traction.
* A Della’morte Dell’amore sequel? Sure, I’ll eat it.
* Fuck you, there is NOT a Hawkeye story called “The High, Hard Shaft.”
* Finally, we are now accepting Destructor fanart submissions.
Destructor update
January 24, 2011Page three of “Prison Break” is up on DestructorComics.com, and things are about to get pretty heated.
Hail, hail, the gang’s all here
January 20, 2011Destructor in “Prison Break”
January 17, 2011Now leaving Croc-Town
January 13, 2011Today we posted the final page of “Destructor Comes to Croc-Town,” completing our first ever Destructor story. Thank you to everyone who’s read/commented/linked — it means so much.
Read the whole thing on one page by clicking here. New story starts Monday.
Destructor update
January 10, 2011Get the family together and read page 13 of “Destructor Comes to Croc-Town.”
Victory is his
January 6, 2011I am the arm/there will be blood/human after all
January 3, 2011Ring in 2011 with the eleventh page of “Destructor Comes to Croc-Town.”
Destructor update
December 30, 2010Destructor is in a bad way in today’s page from “Destructor Comes to Croc-Town.”
Belated Destructor update
December 29, 2010No sooner had I regained Internet access than a series of hellacious difficulties befell me, from faulty utilities to ill pets to recalcitrant airline reservations. But as bad as things have been for me over the past three days, they’re not as bad as Destructor has it in the latest page of “Destructor Comes to Croc-Town”.
BOOM
December 23, 2010In today’s page of “Destructor Comes to Croc-Town,” Destructor nears the finish line. Or does he?
Destructor update
December 20, 2010Today’s page of “Destructor Comes to Croc-Town” sees progress made and trouble foreshadowed.
Destructor Update
December 13, 2010Page five of “Destructor Comes to Croc-Town” is now up on DestructorComics.com. And remember, you can read the whole story so far by clicking here.
Destructor update
December 9, 2010Go make a splash with page four of “Destructor Comes to Croc-Town.”
Destructor update
December 6, 2010Carnival of souls: Barnaby, WoW and event comics, killer Killoffer photo, more
December 2, 2010* Quick housekeeping note first: I posted a quick guide to some of DestructorComics.com’s navigation features. I think they’re pretty neat.
* Tom Spurgeon breaks the news that Fantagraphics will be publishing Daniel Clowes-designed collections of Crockett Johnson’s Barnaby, arguably the great as-yet-uncollected classic comic. Over on Robot 6 I have a brief spiel about why I think the strip will work in the Tumblr Age.
* Also on Robot 6: Please pay Michael Kupperman, you monsters.
* Here’s more engrossing writing on life after recent developments in World of Warcraft by Bruce Baugh. I think the points he raises here about constructing a player’s early experience to maximize enjoyment in the immediate term and the impact of the story in the medium-to-long term can apply to pretty much any form of narrative storytelling.
* Moreover, as I think I’ve said before, it’s really only after reading Bruce’s posts of late that it’s occurred to me that the “line-wide event” model of superhero comics publishing developed by Marvel and DC over the past half-decade echoes the way WoW is set up. Like, okay, here’s this new expansion pack, and now everyone has to deal with the Lich King, or now everyone has to deal with natural disasters caused by a crazy dragon; here’s this new event, and now everyone has to deal with Captain America fighting Iron Man, or now everyone has to deal with President Obama offering a Cabinet position to the Green Goblin because he shot an alien on live TV. If you figure that there’s some sort of nerd collective unconscious that welcomed both these developments, you can also see why that collective unconscious has rebelled somewhat now that the events aren’t quite so all-encompassing, or indeed jostling up against one another in a way that confuses readers looking for one single direction to march in.
* Benjamin Marra on Fox News. Benjamin Marra in The New Yorker. I’ll take “Sentences I’m Delighted to Be Able to Write” for $1000, Alex. (Via Bill Kartalopoulos.)
* Speaking of which! Pitchfork’s Ryan Dombal interviews David Lynch about his burgeoning career as a recording artist.
* I really like today’s Wolverine contribution to the Covered blog from Patt Kelley simply because the header he added to the image, USE YOUR CLAWS MY BELOVED, is a band name waiting to happen. Click the link to see what he’s riffing off of.
* Matt Madden is absolutely right: This photo of Killoffer by Ana Alexandrino is one of the greatest photos of a cartoonist of all time.
And do click that link — it’s a con report on the RIO Comicon from Jah Furry, and he’s got a lot of terrific photos of what looks like a very vibrant artcomics scene.
* Finally, David Fincher should do a shot-for-shot remake of Fight Club with Justin Timberlake as Tyler, Jesse Eisenberg as the narrator, and Kristen Stewart as Marla.
Destructor update
December 2, 2010Today’s new page is up on DestructorComics.com. Things have taken a turn for the worse, but for whom?